Rarely traveling from Paris, "Whistler's Mother," whose formal
title is "Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 1: Portrait of the
Artist's Mother," 1871, is a highlight of James Abbott McNeill
Whistler's career and the current exhibition. Musee d'Orsay,
Paris. Photo ©Reunion des Musees Nationaux/Art Resource, New
York City.
Born in Italy to American expatriate parents, John Singer
Sargent (1856-1925) found inspiration in the beauty of the streets
and parks of Paris, as reflected in his romantic "In the Luxembourg
Garden" of 1879. He also executed numerous portraits in Paris.
Bostonian Childe Hassam (1859-1935), who studied extensively in
the French capital, reveled in Parisian cityscapes, particularly
canvases of horse-drawn vehicles on the wet or snowy broad
boulevards of modern Paris. In "At the Florist," 1889, he
depicted a "vibrant display of autumn flowers, each bunch as
perfectly wrapped as the elegant lady who admires them," in
curator Hirshler's words.
The section covering "Artists in Paris" examines the lives of
expatriates, such as painter Thomas Hovenden, whose disheveled
appearance in "Self Portrait of the Artist in his Studio," 1875,
suggests his bohemian predilections. Particularly interesting is
a "Self Portrait," 1885, by old-line Bostonian artist Ellen Day
Hale (1855-1940), whose confident, forthright pose was reflected
in her bold paintings.
"Paris as Training Ground and Proving Ground" documents efforts
by Americans to gain recognition by exhibiting in the keenly
competitive, annual Paris Salons. The highly ambitious James
Abbott McNeill Whistler (1834-1903), who made his way to Paris
via Lowell, Mass., Russia, London, Connecticut and West Point,
was initially rebuffed when his portrait of his mistress and
model, Joanna Hiffernan, "Symphony in White, No. 1, The White
Girl," 1862, was rejected by the Salon. It did appear in the
alternative display, the Salon des Refuses in 1863, helping to
burnish Whistler's reputation as a daring and controversial
figure.
Whistler had better luck a decade later when his iconic
"Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 1: Portrait of the Artist's
Mother," showing Anna Matilda McNeill Whistler in a somber,
erect, profile pose was a hit at the 1883 Salon. Later purchased
by the French government and now in the collection of the Musee
d'Orsay, "Whistler's Mother" is making its first appearance in
this country since 1983.
The great Winslow Homer (1836-1910) spent part of 1867 in Paris
frequenting exhibitions and galleries. His lovely canvas, "Summer
Night," 1890, showing two women dancing by moonlight in front of
his Prout's Neck, Maine, studio, hung unsold for years at the
Cumberland Club in nearby Portland. After its appearance in the
1900 Exposition Universelle in Paris, it was purchased by the
French government and is now in the collection of the Musee
d'Orsay.

Young John Singer Sargent's affinity for the beauty of Paris is
reflected in "In the Luxembourg Gardens," 1879. Philadelphia
Museum of Art, Pennsylvania. The John G. Johnson Collection.
Two quite different full-length likenesses of American women
in Paris by Sargent, "Mrs Henry White," 1883, and "Madam X,"
1883-84, document his daring and genius in portraiture. Whereas the
graceful Mrs White, wife of a diplomat, appeared in an elegant
satin gown, the notorious Virginie Gautreau, married to a French
banker, struck a bold pose in a revealing dress. The latter was so
harshly criticized at the 1884 Salon that Sargent fled to London.
Philadelphian Cecilia Beaux (1855-1942), inspired by "Whistler's
Mother," painted her sister and nephew in "Les dernier jours
d'enfance" in 1885 in her hometown and exhibited it in the Paris
Salon two years later. Two other notable Beaux works on view are
portraits of her handsome cousin (with her black cat), "Sita and
Sarita," 1893-94, owned by the Musee d'Orsay, and of her
appealing 2-year-old niece, "Ernesta," 1894, in the Met's
collection.
William Merritt Chase (1849-1916), who famously declared, "My
God, I would rather go to Europe than to go to Heaven," actually
studied primarily in Munich, but he frequented Paris and showed
works at the Paris Salon, including a view of a student, "Miss
Dora Wheeler," 1883, inspired by Whistler's maternal image.
The section on "At Home in Paris" is highlighted by Sargent's
large fascinating painting of the four children of a fellow
expatriate artist in their elegant Paris apartment, "The
Daughters of Edward Darley Boit," 1882. The most ambitious
painting by the 26-year-old artist, its unconventional
composition was based on Diego Velazquez's celebrated "Las
Meninas" of 1656, which Sargent had copied at the Prado.
Heir to a sugar plantation fortune, Julius LeBlanc Stewart
(1855-1919), was born in Philadelphia, but lived in Paris from
the age of 10, becoming a leading society figure. He excelled at
large canvases of the elite at leisure, including images of
actresses Sarah Bernhardt and Lily Langtry. Stewart's "Woman in
an Interior," 1895, depicting a stylish "New Woman" in a
luxurious setting, recalls the naturalism of French English
painter Jean-Jacques Tissot.
Working on both sides of the Atlantic, John White Alexander
(1856-1915) did his best work in Paris in the 1890s, where he
combined contemporary French aesthetics with elements of
symbolism in paintings of idealized women in elegant interior
settings. The sinuous curves and provocative poses of the models
in "Repose," 1895, and "Isabella and the Pot of Basil," 1897, far
different from the more wholesome females depicted by most
American artists, marked Alexander as the most "overtly erotic"
of his contemporaries, says Weinberg.

Drawing on décor ideas from "Whistler's Mother," Cecilia Beaux
depicted her sister and nephew amid family heirlooms in her
Philadelphia studio. Acclaim for "Les dernier jours d'enfance,"
1885, put Beaux on the artistic map, even before she studied in
Paris. Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Philadelphia, gift of Cecilia Drinker Saltonstall.
Like their French counterparts, American artists in Paris
escaped to the countryside in the summer, bent on painting
outdoors. The "Summer Places" section of the exhibition offers
pastoral views of summer art colonies. Sargent's lush "Claude Monet
Painting at the Edge of a Wood," 1885, reflects the American's long
friendship with the French master and how his visits to Giverny had
the effect, as curator Weinberg suggests, of "reinforcing his
command of Impressionism."
A singular figure among the American expatriates was African
American painter Henry O. Tanner (1859-1937), who received
academic training in Philadelphia and Paris, and made the French
capital his permanent home after 1891. Before he concentrated on
biblical subjects, Tanner recorded views of Paris, and drawing on
summers in Brittany, painted "The Young Sabot Maker," 1895,
showing a young Breton making wooden shoes in a setting that
evokes Jesus in Joseph's workshop.
The final section of "Americans in Paris," called "Back in the
USA," examines the manner in which Americans sought to adapt
their French training and exposure to distinctly American
subjects. Some, like Theodore Robinson, who had excelled in
Monet-like views of Giverny, found depicting American scenes
difficult. By contrast, two friends and fellow New Englanders who
trained together in Boston and Paris, Frank W. Benson (1862-1951)
and Edmund C. Tarbell (1862-1938), combined academic and
Impressionist techniques in memorable paintings around New
England, and became influential teachers at the School of
Boston's Museum of Fine Arts.
Benson's "Eleanor," 1907, starring his 17-year-old daughter, is
one of a number of glorious, sun-splashed views he painted of his
children and wife at their summer home on North Haven Island in
Penobscot Bay, Maine. Tarbell's bright and airy "Three Sisters -
A Study in June Sunlight," 1890, features a conversation among
his sisters and his wife (holding daughter Josephine) in the
center, conversing on a leisurely summer afternoon.
After early academic training in New York, Dennis Miller Bunker
(1861-1891) successfully adapted the bold brushwork and brilliant
colors of Impressionism he learned in Europe to paint bright,
sunny, atmospheric views of New England. His gorgeous
"Chrysanthemums," 1888, depicts the greenhouse of art patron
Isabella Stewart Gardner and her husband in suburban Boston. It
was completed a year after a sojourn in England when Sargent
imparted to Bunker a "more fluent technique and a new awareness
of sunlight effects," according to Weinberg.
After initial training in his native Massachusetts, Willard
Metcalf (1858-1925) studied in Paris, painted in Giverny and
returned to New England to become a premier Impressionist
landscapist of the region. His lyrical, brilliantly hued
"Gloucester Harbor," 1895, offers an inviting view of that busy
seaport.
The curators astutely included lesser-known but talented artists,
such as John Leslie Breck, Charles Courtney Curran, Elizabeth
Jane Gardner, Mary Fairchild MacMonnies Low and Elizabeth Nourse,
whose work deserves greater recognition.
Upon returning to the United States, Hassam applied his vibrant
brand of Impressionism to colorful, sun-filled, appealing images
of leisure life in New England, including unforgettable homages
to Celia Thaxter's effulgent garden and other wonders of
Appledore Island in the Isles of Shoals, off the Maine-New
Hampshire coast.

Winslow Homer soaked up atmosphere and art during a year in
Paris, 1866-1867, but did not study there. Perhaps his most
romantic painting, "A Summer Night," 1890, painted in Prout's
Neck, Maine, won a gold medal at the 1900 Exposition
Universelle in Paris. The French government purchased it for
the Musee du Luxembourg. Musee d'Orsay, Paris. Photo ©Reunion
des Musees Nationaux/Art Resource, New York City.
The exhibition appropriately culminates with one of Hassam's
splendid World War I flag scenes in New York City, "Allies Day, May
1917," in which the stars and stripes and France's tricolor fly in
glorious harmony, symbolizing both the wartime and artistic
alliance of the two countries.
The organizers of this appealing exhibition took on a daunting
challenge in trying to convey the variety and achievements of
American artists in France in the latter half of the Nineteenth
Century. They have succeeded admirably by selecting masterworks
by titans and lesser-known painters alike, and weaving them
together in a well-organized fashion.
The exhibition catalog is equally admirable, providing
informative and interesting essays by curators Adler, Hirshler
and Weinberg and art historians David Park Curry, Randolphe
Rapetti and Christopher Riopelle, along with hundreds of color
plates and black and white photographs. The 288-page book is
published by Yale University Press in association with National
Gallery Company, and it sells for $65 (hardcover) and $40
(softcover).
The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston is at 465 Huntington Avenue. For
information, 617-267-9300 or www.mfa.org.
All images courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston